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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Fri Dec 30, 2016, 10:45 AM Dec 2016

America's democracy has become illiberal - By Fareed Zakaria

By Fareed Zakaria Opinion writer December 29 at 7:16 PM

Two decades ago, I wrote an essay in Foreign Affairs that described an unusual and worrying trend: the rise of illiberal democracy. Around the world, dictators were being deposed and elections were proliferating. But in many of the places where ballots were being counted, the rule of law, respect for minorities, freedom of the press and other such traditions were being ignored or abused. Today, I worry that we might be watching the rise of illiberal democracy in the United States — something that should concern anyone, Republican or Democrat, Donald Trump supporter or critic.

What we think of as democracy in the modern world is really the fusing of two different traditions. One is, of course, public participation in selecting leaders. But there is a much older tradition in Western politics that, since the Magna Carta in 1215, has centered on the rights of individuals — against arbitrary arrest, religious conversion, censorship of thought. These individual freedoms (of speech, belief, property ownership and dissent) were eventually protected, not just from the abuse of a tyrant but also from democratic majorities. The Bill of Rights, after all, is a list of things that majorities cannot do.

In the West, these two traditions — liberty and law on the one hand, and popular participation on the other — became intertwined, creating what we call liberal democracy. It was noticeable when I wrote the essay, and even clearer now, that in a number of countries — including Hungary, Russia, Turkey, Iraq and the Philippines — the two strands have come apart. Democracy persists (in many cases), but liberty is under siege. In these countries, the rich and varied inner stuffing of liberal democracy is vanishing, leaving just the outer, democratic shell.

What stunned me as this process unfolded was that laws and rules did little to stop this descent. Many countries had adopted fine constitutions, put in place elaborate checks and balances, and followed best practices from the advanced world. But in the end, liberal democracy was eroded anyway. It turns out that what sustains democracy is not simply legal safeguards and rules, but norms and practices — democratic behavior. This culture of liberal democracy is waning in the United States today.

more
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/america-is-becoming-a-land-of-less-liberty/2016/12/29/2a91744c-ce09-11e6-a747-d03044780a02_story.html?utm_term=.27d8d79fad8a&wpisrc=nl_headlines&wpmm=1

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America's democracy has become illiberal - By Fareed Zakaria (Original Post) DonViejo Dec 2016 OP
"The Bill of Rights...is a list of things that majorities cannot do." yallerdawg Dec 2016 #1
The irony of democracy is it must be voluntary and it can't be mandated. no_hypocrisy Dec 2016 #2
K&R Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Dec 2016 #3
I agree. kentuck Dec 2016 #4

yallerdawg

(16,104 posts)
1. "The Bill of Rights...is a list of things that majorities cannot do."
Fri Dec 30, 2016, 11:32 AM
Dec 2016

Never heard it put like that before!

You would think protection and expansion of our individual rights would be at the center of our shared American values - and then an election like this reminds us there are a lot of Americans who don't give a crap about your rights.

Do they even understand?

no_hypocrisy

(46,101 posts)
2. The irony of democracy is it must be voluntary and it can't be mandated.
Fri Dec 30, 2016, 11:40 AM
Dec 2016

A democracy can be terminated through violent means or by democracy itself.

As to the latter, democracy can end through a majority vote or by neglect of voters who don't regularly endorse democracy.

Also ironically, democracy can end through republican government where representatives refuse to do their delegated duties. But the representatives are voluntarily elected through a democracy.

It seems to me that there has been a faction or a think tank that has been studying for decades how to systematically end American democracy, perhaps democracy in other countries as well.

kentuck

(111,094 posts)
4. I agree.
Fri Dec 30, 2016, 03:37 PM
Dec 2016

"It turns out that what sustains democracy is not simply legal safeguards and rules, but norms and practices — democratic behavior. This culture of liberal democracy is waning in the United States today. "

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